Four important content marketing lessons from Email Marketing & Marketing Automation Excellence 2017, a global benchmarking research to support businesses
to improve their email, marketing automation, and content marketing ROIBy Robert Rose • Chief Strategy Advisor • Content Marketing Institute
COMMITMENTAND INVESTMENT
IN AUDIENCE
WINNING CONTENT MARKETING
Introduction
Welcome to the evolution of content
Investment and commitment to the audience is the key to winning
at content marketing
Know your audience
Segment and prioritize audiences
Test and optimize the audience journey
Measurement: progress is as important as the result
Conclusion
4
6
8
11
16
22
28
32
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
Businesses often manage content marketing, email marketing, and marketing
automation as separate channels. But to harness the power of each you
need to bring them together around the needs of your audience. In this report
Robert Rose of the Content Marketing Institute explains how to create a more
audience-centered approach to integrating these activities.
Dr. Dave Chaffey
CEO and co-founder of Smart Insights
Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience4
It’s pretty simple. For many businesses, content marketing is losing ground.
The last seventeen years have seen radical change in consumer behavior.
The way customers become aware, browse, investigate, purchase, use,
complain and/or become loyal to the way a brand delivers its product or service
has changed. Marketing is arguably more important today than it’s ever been.
However, many businesses seem to be stuck in the 1990s, with the strategy
to optimize marketing still stuck in a campaign-oriented, direct-marketing, sales-
first myopia. Many marketing departments in today’s business still serve mostly
a subservient, on-demand function: producing ever more sales sheets, PDFs,
brochures, and copy for an ever-hungry business that views it as the department
that “makes things pretty.”
This has to stop. Businesses have to win at marketing, otherwise they’ll fail.
This means they need to get much more skilled at content that goes well
beyond sales PDFs, brochures, and ad copy. They can only win if they can create
valuable content.
Content’s power to cut through the advertising noise, develop better customer
insight, and deliver actual value to consumers throughout the buyer’s journey
has proven it to be a powerful tool for marketers. But, in many cases, this
practice is suffering from the slow evolution of marketing in general. Content
marketing done well is NOT just an alternative form of advertising. For many
businesses, doing content marketing well is new, and “different”. As such, many
are simply experimenting and making the minimal possible investment in terms
of both time and money. In other words, these businesses are applying the old
rules of direct marketing to the new approach of content marketing and it’s not
working very well. It’s losing ground.
INTRODUCTION: WINNING AT CONTENT MARKETING
5
Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience6 7
But it doesn’t have to be. When content marketing is married with other parts
of the marketing process – especially email marketing, marketing automation,
and the capture of audience data – it can provide exponential value to the
business. Marketers just need to step up and develop the right investment
and process into this approach.
Put simply: the time is ripe for marketers to commit and invest in audiences
to win at marketing. Peter Drucker once said that “marketing and innovation
are the unique and distinguishing functions of the business.” Smart content
marketing can be the fuel that proves him right.
Welcome to the evolution of content
I was tremendously excited to receive and review the results of GetResponse’s
Email Marketing & Marketing Automation Excellence 2017 Research. This
was a project that we at CMI worked with GetResponse, Smart Insights,
and Holistic Email Marketing to develop. The goal was to examine more than
2,500 marketers from around the world, and understand their use of content
marketing, marketing automation, and email marketing. From there, our aim is
to deliver pragmatic advice that helps improve content marketing, email, and
marketing automation efforts. I’m pleased to be the one to discuss the findings
on the approach of content marketing. In one of the other reports focusing on
this research, and specific to email marketing, Dr. Dave Chaffey wrote:
Now more than ever, organizations need a sound process to keep up
with ever-changing best practices and take advantages of email marketing.
I couldn’t agree more – and you could just as easily replace “email”
with “content”. The investment in a sound process that delivers ongoing results
is the true mark of winning at both content marketing and email.
The new objective for marketing will be not just to “create customers”,
but to evolve customers, from unaware to brand-subscribing customer
advocates. Content-driven experiences, powered and scaled by email
marketing, and marketing automation, will be the natural selection process
that moves the customer through that evolution.
The digital disruption of marketing has enabled marketers with powerful new
tools. We can now publish and distribute content to build our own audiences.
In fact, this is exactly what marketing automation is being used for, as this
research has shown.
As you’ll see from the chart below, over 43% of marketers share blog posts,
videos, and webinars using marketing automation tools. Other popular types
include offer or transaction-related content, product development updates,
and ebooks – all of which are distributed through automated workflows
by more than 31% of marketers.
Content types distributed using marketing automation
Blog posts
Videos and webinars
Offer or transaction-related content
Product development updates
Ebooks
Press releases
Discussions from online community
Podcasts
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 5% 15% 25% 35% 45%
46.7%
43.6%
34.4%
32.6%
31.1%
18.6%
17.9%
10.8%
Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience 9
But, of course, this also means that our competitors can do so as well. In our
experience at CMI, successful companies are creating content marketing
as a strategic function in their business. We have seen evidence of this in all
the research, advisory clients and CMI’s own Executive Forum. Successful
companies are not just investing in one-off tools that fuel content campaigns.
They are committing to holistic content platforms, powered by teams using
enterprise-class tools that scale across all of marketing.
Investment and commitment to the audience is the key to winning at content marketing
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In this research study, we talked with more than 2,500 marketers around
the world, from a range of business sizes and industries. These practitioners
responded to the study of different forms of email marketing, marketing
automation, content marketing, and social media marketing questions.
The breakdown of marketers involved was:
✔ Business-to-Consumer (B2C) marketing: 41.8%
✔ Business-to-Business (B2B) marketing: 19.1%
✔ Both B2B and B2C (B2B2C) marketing: 39.1%
Overall, respondents were asked their biggest challenge with integrating
content marketing with email marketing and marketing automation,
and the two answers were “time” and “content”. This really aligns well with
CMI’s own research, where we consistently find that “not enough time”
and “content creation challenges” are the two biggest factors to which
marketers attribute their struggle with success.
Further, the use of technology continues to be one of the largest learning
curves for marketers. In CMI’s 2017 Content Strategy Study, we found that
the number one educational challenge for marketers regarding content was
“how to better use technology.”
Finally, hampering all marketer’s efforts here is the challenge of data quality.
A recent study by research firm Ascend2 found that “while improving data
quality is the biggest challenge to marketing data success, it’s also easily
the most important objective of a marketing data strategy.” This finding also
emerged from the GetResponse Research here. Budget and data quality were
the top two challenges mentioned for integrating marketing automation into
their process (36% and 35.4% respectively.)
Here is the important point: content marketing, email marketing, and
marketing automation technology work hand in hand.
✔ Invest in a holistic platform combining content and technology, so that you
can better use technology to improve the quality of audience data.
✔ Improve education and use of technology, so that you can afford content
marketers with more time and the ability to create higher quality content.
✔ Use your technology to connect digital content experiences, so that you
can scale and measure that high quality content across the entire buyer’s
journey.
8 Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience
Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience10
AUDIENCEKNOW YOUR
The quality of the audience database is what’s most valuable in any strategic
content marketing program. Winning at content means investing
and committing to the kind of content that will inspire customers to provide
the richest and most accurate data. This audience data is what powers higher
quality email marketing and marketing automation programs. And a higher
quality email and marketing automation strategy then makes a powerful
business case to integrate technologies that scale that effort. Put simply:
audience data is what drives a content marketing winner.
In the paper that follows, we will highlight the results of the Email Marketing
& Marketing Automation Excellence 2017 research. We will also explore best
practices for the new approach to content marketing and how a commitment
to investment and a strategic process keeps a content marketing strategy in
good health.
We’ve organized this paper into four sections that talk about four important
ways to marry audience data management practices with strategic content
marketing creation, as well as methods content marketers can use to make
themselves for more valuable to the C-Suite.
So, if you’re ready, let’s get to it.
Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience12 13
One of the findings in the GetResponse study was just how popular content marketing has become. This aligns well with our ongoing research at CMI. Each year we find between 80% and 90% of all marketers are trying content marketing in some capacity.
But in the GetResponse study, what was interesting was that of all the different
budget investment options for 2017, content marketing had the highest priority.
91.3% of the respondents said they were going to keep their budget the same
or increase it in the coming year.
Then, when we asked marketers what the primary driver of success metrics for
email marketing would be, increasing subscribers was the top response at 29%.
The second most popular answer was that there were no current metrics at all.
The inevitable question when it comes to investing more money and effort
to increase the number of subscribers is – what for? Who is it that we’re
actually trying to get to subscribe? Who is this audience? What value will they
have for the business.
The challenges of not being able to answer these questions emerge later
in the study. When we asked specifically about marketing automation
challenges, marketers indicated securing budget, quality of customer data,
knowledge to set up types of automation, and producing engaging content as
the top four answers. And these answers are all linked to each other.
In our experience, if marketers don’t know their audience, and what they value,
it becomes very difficult to produce engaging content. That makes it difficult
to know how to optimize the setup of your automation solution. This lack
of knowledge, in turn, affects the quality of the customer data you’re getting,
and means it will ultimately be harder to get more budget for new programs.
At CMI, we’ve found that understanding your audience and what they value is
the key to starting a content marketing strategy. If you want to improve
the effectiveness and the quality of both the data and the content, you need
to have the ability to tie the consumption of content back to the personas
you’re trying to target.
The investment of both time and money in persona creation is considerable
and – as many marketers discover only after they begin – it’s a process
that’s never complete. People change, habits change, and the business’
ability to engage with them as people changes. But, at its core, most persona
development is done using only qualitative information that marketers glean
from interviews and research studies.
For your content marketing to succeed, you need the ability to use data
to understand which personas are engaging with various pieces of content.
Increase in subscribers
High-funnel engagement metrics such as opens or clicks
Mid-funnel conversion metrics such as form-fills (e.g. subscriptions, lead generation, inquiries etc.)
Lower funnel conversion metrics such asrevenue/sales/downloads/event attendance etc.We don't currently have any metrics that we focus on
29%
21%14.4%
12.3%
23.3%
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As the famous Alice in Wonderland quote goes – “if you don’t know where you are going, then any
road will take you there.” As a marketer, you need to understand the audience that you’re trying
to attract, then create a step-by-step plan to build a high-quality data profile as your subscriber
base grows.
STEP 1: Develop your high-profile audience personas. Your targeted personas can be created
through a mixture of research, surveys, conversations with your sales teams, and interviews
with existing or past customers. The goal is to develop a profile of your “best audience”. So, look for
the commonalities of what these people value the most. What problems are they trying to solve?
What are they interested in? Synthesize this information together to determine your primary target
audience.
STEP 2: As you start to develop new forms for subscription to your newsletter, or your blog, or your
resource center – begin to include fields that will capture important information about your persona.
For example, if your target audience primarily works for small businesses, then you may want to ask
about company size on your forms.
STEP 3: Document and formalize your personas and your data acquisition strategy. Once you
identify your target audience, everyone should be on the same page when it comes to the persona
profile. Build your persona profiles, and document them so that everyone is clear on the definition
of the priority targets.
STEP 4: Put your target personas to work. Once you have personas defined, and the ability for your
web forms to capture some of the most important data, you can begin to optimize your audience
strategy. Utilize technology to develop “lead scoring” for subscribers/audience members who more
closely align with your targets. Also, you can use technology to help you build progressively richer
profiles on your audience. You don’t have to ask for all the data at once. The right technology can
help you build a rich data profile for your audience over time.
WHAT TO DO NEXT: First, if you haven’t already taken the first step and begun the research
to develop a richer audience/persona profile, launch a research project before anything else. Then,
start looking at your capabilities around the second step. Having a flexible platform to capture
persona information is one place where having a great email and/or marketing automation solution
can really help. Look at your existing marketing database (if you have one) and establish a baseline
metric for your audience. For example, perhaps all you have now are email addresses. How many
of them bounce? What’s the current response rate?
Then, set a goal for improving the health of that database for six months or a year from now.
WINNINGRECOMMENDATION
It’s only when you connect this data with the target personas that you can
answer the questions:
✔ Are we creating the kind of content that’s resonating
with our target audience?
✔ As our subscriber list grows, are we improving the value
of the customer data we’re collecting?
✔ Are we becoming more or less effective in our content marketing efforts?
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SEGMENT AND PRIORITIZE AUDIENCES
In the GetResponse research, we found some very interesting challenges with targeting the delivery of more relevant content.
When we asked specifically about targeting email messages, more than
half (50.4%) of the respondents said that they do “none – everyone receives
the same message.” Only 14% of those surveyed use segmentation with
automated rules. And only 6.6% use more sophisticated layering techniques
such as personalization or behavioral targeting.
We also asked about the techniques that marketers use to plan the integration
of content with email marketing and marketing automation. According
to the number one response, most marketers source content on an ad-hoc
basis as they use it.
One of the biggest success factors in content marketing is being able
to continually hold subscribers’ attention, to build relationships with them over
23%
19.50%
33.30%
29%
Type of segmentation usedNone
Basic segmentation – we use 2-5 criteria for targeting, e.g. demographics, category of interest (B2C), industry, or role (B2B), without the use of dynamic content.
We have segmentation, and also automated rules-based personalization for different audiences, e.g. using dynamic content.
We use layered personalized targeting that combines demographics with behavioral segments, lifecycle position, activity level, and lead scoring.
14%
6.6%
50.4%
time. This means that you have to use their consumption of content
as insight into how you source what content they should experience
next. For example, if a subscriber has read a lot of articles in your digital
magazine, you shouldn’t send them an email introducing them to it.
Even if you follow the steps to “get to know your audience”, you still
need to understand that not all of them are equal. And that there’s
usually more than one audience you’re trying to target. They’re all
in very different places along their buyer’s journey. You should be
able to segment and prioritize content to your subscribers along their
journey, and use their behavior to source new content.
The key here is for content marketers to work hand in hand with their
technology teams to develop a process of audience segmentation
and prioritization. Content marketing experiences such as a blog
or a digital resource center should connect to the more purchase-
oriented experiences. In this way, content consumption data can be
used to help pool these subscribers. For example, your subscribers
could move into a segment called “leads” once they consume some
or one particular type of content. Then, once they do, they could start
receiving more product-related content than they did before.
The goal here is to develop a process where the business can measure
the effectiveness of content throughout the whole funnel. Your
objective is not to just generate more traffic or subscribers, but better
traffic and more engaged subscribers.
The ability to segment and prioritize not only enables better
measurement, but also provides valuable insight to help you source
better content to improve all aspects of your strategy.
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It’s time to take an assessment and then prioritize and plan where the data model can be improved
over time. It may be a comprehensive re-marketing campaign to clean the data. It may be that it just
makes sense to start from scratch. Or, it may make sense to prioritize one particular target segment
in order to develop keener insight.
For example, one B2B manufacturer we worked with assessed their existing subscriber database.
Even though they were targeting both high-level executives, and lower-level managers with their
content, they found:
1. They were actually attracting a much higher number of lower-level manager personas.
2. When they closed a deal, it was almost always the executive persona that made the decision,
and they were influenced by the manager who made the initial contact.
3. Many of these managers were falling out of the buyer’s journey about mid-way through the funnel.
What was happening?
They discovered that these lower-level managers were getting value out of the content – but only
to a point. After consuming a certain amount of content, the content that was highly targeted
to executives wasn’t as relevant any longer – so they gave up and went elsewhere.
And on the other side, executives who were coming to the site, weren’t finding the content that they
would initially find appealing.
They prioritized the creation of low-funnel level content to the managers to help them make
a business case. Then, they put a greater priority on improving and targeting the executive content
at the high end of the funnel. By segmenting these two audiences, and prioritizing the content
delivery to each, they solved the challenge, and improved the content marketing results for both
personas.
Ultimately, creating a great data story helps to guide the content strategy, giving the marketer greater
insights into each customer’s needs.
What to do next: Create a goal and an associated metric for the persona targeted vs. persona
reached. For example, you may associate your content targeting as 60%/20%/20% toward three
personas. Associate the actual reach of your content to that goal using the marketing data collected.
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THE AUDIENCE JOURNEY
TEST AND OPTIMIZE
One of the keys to winning at any sport is to match the right “play”
or “move” to the right part of the game. And there is, likewise,
a need to understand how each play contributes to the next phase
of the whole game. Similarly, mapping content to the buyer’s
journey is only half the equation. You need to manage in a smart
way the time you invest in gathering data DURING that journey,
to understand which data does (or does not) affect the outcome
at some phase of that journey.
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Jeff Ernst from Forrester captured this well in a blog post he wrote discussing
how marketers still have a “blind spot” when it comes to the buyer’s journey.
He said: “You need to recognize that the B2B buying process is not one big
decision; it is a series of micro-decisions. And the company that wins
the business is the company that is there to answer those questions
and provide fresh insights that influence how the buyers think about
the problem so that the buyers can confidently advance their journey.”
Similar to segmenting audiences and prioritizing content delivery to them
based on their needs, successful content marketing also means testing
and optimizing content at any one particular stop along that journey. Every time
a content marketer creates a headline, or a blog post, or any piece of content,
they’re making a guess about what will resonate with the target audience.
And many times, this guess is wrong.
However, you need to bear in mind that the challenge may not be in the
content itself. The actual content might be perfect. But the problem might lie
in the headline that was chosen. Or in the email subject line that promotes
the content. Or in how the call to action was worded based on the audience
segment. Therefore, testing and optimizing content at every single stage is an
important step. The problem is that most content marketers don’t do it at all.
This problem was pronounced in the GetResponse research as well. More than
half (51%) of the respondents replied that they don’t currently test their email
marketing.
This is an important point. As a content marketer, you have to develop not only
a plan to deliver content at the most relevant step in the buyer’s journey, but
also a plan that can actually optimize the experience for the audience at each
step.
WINNINGRECOMMENDATION
As we’ve discussed, content marketers should take the time to first identify the gaps in their existing
data, then clean and prune that data to make smarter decisions and priorities about segments
to target. Marketers will also benefit by aligning the future data capture (as well as appending
through third party services) along the optimal content mapping and buyer’s journey insight.
A critical component of developing a successful content marketing approach will be to develop
a testing plan for content to optimize conversions for each audience segment.
This is the critical piece here. It’s not just having one type of registration form that gates
ALL content – independent of the stage the buyer may find themselves in. Invest the extra time
to understand:
• What value is THIS content providing, and should we split-test it against an alternative?
• What stage is the buyer likely to be in for this piece of content, should we test or try and optimize
the call to action at this stage?
• What is the kind of content this customer is most likely to want next (what should we be putting
in as a call to action?) How can we start to learn what is most effective?
• How do we also progressively ask for more information based on the “non-linear” nature
of the journey? Should we test adding more form fields to the subscription form?
Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience26 27
How to develop a testing plan1. Define WHY you will test. You should have a reason to test your content.
So, you should start with a basic hypothesis of what benefit you could gain.
For example, you might say – “I believe we can have more people open our
messages.” Or, you might say, “We can have more of our target audience visit
our resource center.” Work with your team to define the success we believe we
can achieve.
2. Define WHAT you will test. The next step is to understand what it is exactly
you’re going to test. While it is wonderful that you want to have more of your
target market visit your resource center, the reasons they may not be visiting
could be quite varied. So, you want to pose your hypothesis for why you are
challenged with achieving success. For example, you might form a theory that
“you believe that your subject lines are not compelling enough.” Or, you might
believe that “your content is too long” or that “your layout is confusing.”
Note: as a general rule, you only want to test one hypothesis at a time.
3. Examine HOW you will test. If you have any existing data or measurement,
you should look to see what the trend is over the last few months or quarters.
For example, if you want to have more targeted visitors, you should look at your
historical data to see if there are any traffic patterns there. You may discover,
for example, that there is a weekly or monthly pattern of traffic. Therefore, you
should let your test run for a week, or a month, so that you can take advantage
of the whole pattern. Or, for example, if you always send out your email on
Mondays, you should duplicate that for your test. Make your new test as similar
to your previous campaigns as possible.
4. Create. Once you’ve defined the test, the next step is to use your technology
to create it. You might test a new layout of your email. Or you might create
different calls to action. Or you might create different subject lines. Remember,
only test one thing at a time, so that the results are clear. However, if your
audience is large enough, you can create tests to multiple audience segments.
For example, you might test your theories against two of your best performing
lists. Or there might be a reason to create the same test against the best
list vs. the worst list to see which performs better. Or you might create one
random segment, and test layout. And you could create another random
segment and test headlines.
5. Measure and analyze. Once you have started running the test, you will
begin to see which version performs better. You’ll gain insight and either prove
or disprove the theory that you came up with when you defined the test.
You should then form a new hypothesis and start again.
This commitment to testing is an ongoing process. If possible, every new email and campaign
should be testing something. You can go back and return to old theories, and you can develop
new theories.
As content marketing begins to play more of a substantial role over more conversion points
(the “micro-decisions” as Ernst called them), creating an ongoing plan for testing and evolving data
attributes will be a critical piece of a winning strategy.
What to do next:
Establish your test plan, and a baseline and ongoing measurement for content conversions. Monitor
the increase in conversions as you A/B test content, or the fields for which you’re looking to optimize.
Additionally, measure the depth (by pieces of relevant information gathered) as customers go deeper
into the funnel.
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MEASUREMENT: PROGRESS ISAS IMPORTANT AS THE RESULT
A Forrester Research study recently concluded that marketers right now have an “acute focus [only] on acquisition that practically ignores the rest of the buyer’s journey.” In our experience at CMI, far too many times content marketing programs
are cut short or transformed into traditional sales programs – not because
of the progress being made, but by the inability to track the health
of the program and create actionable insight out of it.
In the GetResponse research, when we asked which techniques are used
to plan integration of content with email marketing and marketing automation,
only 16.5% said that they could “measure ROI of each content asset and value
of the email sent.”
Techniques used to integrate content with email marketing and marketing automation
45%
40%
35%
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%We have a long-term strategic approach to content planning,
creation, and distribution.
34.6%
We source contenton an ad-hoc basis
as we use it.
39.3%
We prioritize the use of content marketing to planand deliver the most relevantcontent targeted to audience
through the customerlifecycle.
22.7%
We can measure ROI of each content asset
and value of email sent.
16.5%
We assess and optimize the effectiveness of differentcontent types used within
email.
29.7%
Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience30 31
To be successful in content marketing, you need to invest time to let content
marketing begin to show results. But in order to buy that length of time, you
have to commit to showing progress and return on investment along the way.
It’s important to understand that one of the biggest benefits of a smart data
program, aligned with a content marketing strategy, is not necessarily the
generation of more activity through the pipeline. Certainly more leads are often
a positive result. But more traffic, more leads, and more activity at the top of
the funnel can also be detrimental. When sales is wasting their time on leads
that are unqualified, or simply at the wrong stage in their buying journey, it can
take precious time away (as well as add costs) to the business.
This is why a connected measurement plan that reports on how audiences
move through segments, become leads and ultimately customers, is so
important. You can’t afford to only look at how many subscribers we are
pouring into the top of the funnel, and how many customers are coming out
at the bottom. Develop greater insight into their journey and interaction
with your content while inside the funnel to help you understand the progress
you’re making.
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Companies are inching closer to focusing on real-time interactions with customers. The requirement
for marketers (despite the length of their sales cycle) to react more rapidly to the needs of our buyers
has never been more pronounced.
Understanding the consumption of content at an aggregate level through web analytics will only get
marketer so far. Truly gaining insight into how your content is improving the quality of leads,
the value of customers, and the deeper insight into them is only available through a robust
and healthy data management program.
A CMO at a financial services software company once relayed to me that he no longer looks
at Google Analytics as a measure of how his content marketing efforts are moving the business
forward. “Traffic”, he said, “is the least of my concerns. The blogs we have set up across our different
product groups are there solely to help sales understand what topics, concerns, discussions,
and challenges our customers are having. The data generated by those blogs is appended to every
record we keep on prospects and qualified opportunities. My measurement is feedback from our
sales group – and the number of quality discussions they have with those opportunities. My goal is
to simply help those prospects come to the logical conclusion that we are the best choice for them.”
What to do next:
Create a general dashboard for measurement, one that tracks the right things and will be
the most effective way to show your success – the increasing quality, depth, and overall health
of the marketing database over time.
Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience Winning Content Marketing: Commitment and Investment in Audience32 33
So what does the future hold for content marketing? One thing is clear.
To truly succeed with content marketing as a strategic approach in the marketing
process, you need to change your approach to both content AND data more
broadly. There is simply no argument that both content and data are affecting
your business. Research firm IDC has predicted that enterprise data will grow
at 60% annually. Forrester has predicted that enterprises are growing
unstructured content at a rate of 200% annually. So, content and data will affect
your business – it’s now just a matter of “how,” not “if”.
The 2017 GetResponse research is testament to this. There was wide
acknowledgement that content is a major factor in business, and that there is
a long way to go in terms of winning with a content and messaging
infrastructure.
As I noted in the beginning, a successful content marketing approach is what
feeds great marketing database quality, and that in turn feeds a more optimized
marketing automation approach. All of this means not just a healthier content
program, but a more effective marketing strategy, and an evolved business.
Content marketing data can be that thing that you rush, or don’t pay much
attention to. Or, you can invest the time, the money, and the process that building
an audience deserves. And an audience can be the strategic asset that helps to
differentiate and create success for every part of your business.
RESOURCES
• GetResponse: Email Marketing & Marketing Automation Excellence 2017
• GetResponse: Email Marketing & Beyond: Global Industry Benchmarks 2017
• Content Marketing Institute 2017 Research
• Forrester Blog: Most B2B Marketers Struggle To Create Engaging Content
• Sirius Decisions: The Impact of Bad Data on Demand Generation
• Jeff Erns Blog: Marketers Have A Blind Spot In The Buyer’s Journey
• Smart Insights Email marketing toolkit
CONCLUSION: INVESTING IN AUDIENCES IS WINNING AT BUSINESS